A Bit Adulterated
What’s common between the CEO of ICICI banks, the MD of Apollo
Hospital Enterprises, the Indian Head of Facebook or the current leaders
of the three most powerful political parties. Quite simple isn’t it?
The only similarity is that they are all women. They are there at the
top. From healthcare to banking to entertainment to politics.
Then can they now be called the weaker sex??Isnt laws made to uplift
this “weaker” sex going to hamper the other sex (yeah I mean us males)?
It’s said that women were always the suppressed sex in India. But the
catch word my dear friends is “were” not is! I think it’s high time the
law changes to suit the times before in the process of trying to uplift
one section you push down the other side.
The law which first comes into our eyes in this aspect is the
Adultery Laws in India. Let’s see the relevant section of the IPC first.
Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code states that,
“Whoever has sexual intercourse with a person who is and whom he
knows or has reason to believe to be the wife of another man, without
the consent or connivance of that man, such sexual intercourse not
amounting to the offence of rape, is guilty of the offence of adultery,
and shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term
which may extend to five years, or with fine, or with both. In such
case the wife shall not be punishable as an abettor.”
Now Ladies and Gentlemen, please pay attention to the last line, “In such case the wife shall not be punishable as an abettor.”
Put in simple words a guy seduces a married women and gets caught, he
suffers the wrath of the law and society and if a married women seduces a
man or a unmarried women seduces a married man and they get caught,
then, well then also the poor MAN shall face the wrath of law and the
society whereas the women can go skipping in search of another victim.
A very simple question arises here. Where is the justice? Where is
the equality? On one sides feminist activist’s are screaming themselves
horse demanding equality where on the other side poor men are falling
pray to the uber smart and updated women of India. If you want equality
then why not equality in everything? Why take the good and leave the
rotten?
Before going into anymore criticism of the section let’s see what the need of this section was.
In India the law of adultery which is punishable under section 497 of
the IPC was not present, originally the framers of the code did not
make adultery an offence punishable under the Code, it was the Second
law commission which after giving mature consideration to the subject,
came to the conclusion that it was not advisable to exclude this offence
from the Code.
When this law was framed, women were really the downtrodden segment
of the society. We may have had got independence, but the country was
still plagued by different evils like female infanticide and
mal-practices against women. Owing to the social conditions prevalent at
that time the law commission rightly made this section a bit biased
towards the females to protect them from injustice.
But those conditions are not prevalent now. Women are standing on an
equal footing with men. They have all the same rights and duties. Prima
facie unequal treatment is meted out by the law to men & women, this
is an inherent flaw. It makes the offence punishable for men but not
the wife, to punish the man severely and to let the women who was an
equal part to go scot free is unreasonable on the face of it, it is
discriminatory that for the same act the man becomes the manifestation
of evil but the woman still is considered to retain her virtues and is
treated as a victim.
Taking a matrimonial dispute. The Supreme Court had on previous
occasions criticized section 497 of the Indian Penal Code which punishes
a man alone for adultery for having consensual sex with a married
woman. The criticism of the bench of Justices Aftab Alam and R M Lodha
was on two grounds - which the provision reduces a married woman to a
property of the husband, and that punishment is meted out to the man
though the woman with whom he had consensual sex was an equal partner in
the alleged crime. In 1951, one Yusuf Abdul Aziz challenged the
constitutional validity of the provision. However, Bombay high court
chief justice M C Chagla had upheld the provision saying the
Constitution permitted such special legislation for women, it was held
in this case that this section does not contravene any of the
fundamental rights laid down in the Constitution of India, and therefore
it is not bad or void under Articles 13.
The Supreme Court observed that adultery is a wrong against the
sanctity of the matrimonial home. Thus charges are pressed against the
outsider who breaks the said sanctity. The woman, in cases of adultery,
is considered the victim of a seducer. It appears that the court
believes that the man has an unstoppable seductive charm and the woman
is helpless against it. The evil that is punished by the law, in the
mind of the court, is that of seduction of a woman by another man.
According to the court the woman is considered to be the victim. Thus
the court held that the law was non discriminatory and not violating the
right to equality, thus the court upheld the constitutional validity of
the section 497.
So basically what the Court meant to say was that all men are dashing
playboys with irresistible charms and could woo any modern married
women against her wishes. Whereas, all women were to be considered to be
innocent Sati, Savitri’s.In short instead of trying to get both the
genders on the equal footing its pulling down the male’s.
It is pertinent to note here that The 42nd Law Commission Report has
suggested substituting section 497 of the IPC, the substituting
provision is “S. 497. Adultery – Whoever has sexual intercourse with a
person who is, and whom he or she knows, or has reason to believe, to be
the wife or husband, as the case may be, of another person, without the
consent or connivance of that other person, such sexual intercourse by
the man not amounting to the offence of rape commits adultery, and shall
be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which
may extend to five years, or with fine, or with both”
The Malimath Committee on Criminal Justice Reforms has re-iterated
more or less the same argument, that men and women being equally
partners in the deplorable act, should be made to stand at the same
footing, and equal treatment should be meted out to them both.
Unfortunately none of this changes have taken place as of yet.
Well the best that can be done now is the changes are brought in the
Adultery laws in India before someone starts misusing it for their own
gains. Cause if we don’t change it now, maybe after 20-30 years we would
have to make new laws to uplift the new backward section-the Males.!
No comments:
Post a Comment